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Henry Tedeschi

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Biology author Henry Tedeschi became hooked on biology after reading Charles Darwin's Origin of the Species in fifth grade.

...

Tedeschi was born in Italy, and lived in Switzerland and Argentina before moving to the United States when he was 17 to attend the University of Pittsburgh.
Thinking job opportunities would be aplenty, he brought only enough money to last one year.
"To this day I have difficulty in figuring out why my parents consented to my plans," Tedeschi said.
"In those days travel was not very common -- mostly for financial reasons, one way from Buenos Aires to New York by airplane was approximately $1,200, then the price of a car -- and we would be isolated from each other except for lively correspondence that we always maintained."

After receiving his bachelor's degree in zoology from the University of Pittsburgh in 1950, Tedeschi went on to the University of Chicago for a doctorate in physiology."When I started my research in 1952, the existence of the cell organelles called mitochondria and their biochemical role -- the main energy suppliers of the cell -- was just beginning to be seriously recognized," he said.
"I showed that they were surrounded by a functional membrane that could select what molecules went through.
In addition, I made some other observations, one was that one of the mitochondrial membranes has deep folds like an accordion."
He has written more than 70 scientific articles on various physiology topics.

After graduating from the University of Chicago in 1955, Tedeschi taught at the University of Illinois Medical School in Chicago and later as at the State University of New York at Albany where he pioneered the electrical studies of the mitochondrial membrane.He retired as chair of the department of biological sciences in 1985 and professor in 1998 at the University of New York at Albany.

Tedeschi wrote the first edition of Cell Physiology: Molecular Dynamics, published by Academic Press, in 1974.
Because there was a serious lag between research and what was taught in medical schools, particularly on the revolution in genetics and molecular biology, Tedeschi was always writing material for the graduate students in his department.
"This was my contribution to our graduate program and allowed me to keep up to date," he said.
"At the urging of one of my colleagues, I signed a contract to write Cell Physiology: Molecular Dynamics."

After the first edition, Academic Press wasn't interested in a second.
The rights were returned to Tedeschi.

...

Tedeschi searched again for another publisher, but then decided to publish it himself -- on the web.

The web version of Cell Physiology: Molecular Dynamics, published under the name Minerbi Enterprises, went online in August 1998.
It was the first subscription-based web book in the field.
It is accessed through an ID and password at www.cellphysiology.com.
Tedeschi updates the site just about every day.

"When I started writing textbooks, there was no such thing as the web," he said.
"Now that it was possible, I thought it would be fun to have a book that can be updated whenever I felt the need for it.
And with a field like cell biology, you want to update continually, something you can't do with traditional publishing.
For a small publisher, in a rapidly changing field, this is the way to go."

Some advantages of web publishing, said Tedeschi, are the ability to revise easily and keep yourself up-to-date with the field.
"It allows me to indulge myself in topics I would normally not touch," he said.
Since retiring, he works on updating the book full-time.

The 24-chapter web book has 22 library and class adopters and 300 individual subscriptions, including some from abroad -- Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Japan and Mexico.
"It's not clear how many students this represents because some of the classes are very small and some very large," Tedeschi said.
Subscriptions are $20 for individuals and $100 for libraries or entire classes.
He also allows the subscriptions to be used in multiple classes from the same institution.
"My guess is that the use is modest -- about 1,500 to 2,000 students per year," he said.

Tedeschi enjoyed teaching tremendously: "My research, teaching and authoring have been equally rewarding.
It is satisfying to see students' minds move, challenge, probe."
While at SUNY, he developed a new sophomore course in cell biology.
It included essay exams and tests every week.
"The improvement from one set of tests to another was enormous," he said.

Several of his students went on to become successful in their field.
Four became professors, one at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, another at Drake University and another is at the New York University School of Dentistry.

Biology author Henry Tedeschi became hooked on biology after reading Charles Darwin's Origin of the Species in fifth grade.

...

Tedeschi was born in Italy, and lived in Switzerland and Argentina before moving to the United States when he was 17 to attend the University of Pittsburgh.Thinking job opportunities would be aplenty, he brought only enough money to last one year."To this day I have difficulty in figuring out why my parents consented to my plans," Tedeschi said."In those days travel was not very common -- mostly for financial reasons, one way from Buenos Aires to New York by airplane was approximately $1,200, then the price of a car -- and we would be isolated from each other except for lively correspondence that we always maintained."

After receiving his bachelor's degree in zoology from the University of Pittsburgh in 1950, Tedeschi went on to the University of Chicago for a doctorate in physiology."When I started my research in 1952, the existence of the cell organelles called mitochondria and their biochemical role -- the main energy suppliers of the cell -- was just beginning to be seriously recognized," he said."I showed that they were surrounded by a functional membrane that could select what molecules went through.In addition, I made some other observations, one was that one of the mitochondrial membranes has deep folds like an accordion."He has written more than 70 scientific articles on various physiology topics.

After graduating from the University of Chicago in 1955, Tedeschi taught at the University of Illinois Medical School in Chicago and later as at the State University of New York at Albany where he pioneered the electrical studies of the mitochondrial membrane.He retired as chair of the department of biological sciences in 1985 and professor in 1998 at the University of New York at Albany.

Tedeschi wrote the first edition of Cell Physiology: Molecular Dynamics, published by Academic Press, in 1974.Because there was a serious lag between research and what was taught in medical schools, particularly on the revolution in genetics and molecular biology, Tedeschi was always writing material for the graduate students in his department."This was my contribution to our graduate program and allowed me to keep up to date," he said."At the urging of one of my colleagues, I signed a contract to write Cell Physiology: Molecular Dynamics."

After the first edition, Academic Press wasn't interested in a second.The rights were returned to Tedeschi.

...

Tedeschi searched again for another publisher, but then decided to publish it himself -- on the web.

The web version of Cell Physiology: Molecular Dynamics, published under the name Minerbi Enterprises, went online in August 1998.It was the first subscription-based web book in the field.It is accessed through an ID and password at www.cellphysiology.com.Tedeschi updates the site just about every day.

"When I started writing textbooks, there was no such thing as the web," he said."Now that it was possible, I thought it would be fun to have a book that can be updated whenever I felt the need for it.And with a field like cell biology, you want to update continually, something you can't do with traditional publishing.For a small publisher, in a rapidly changing field, this is the way to go."

Some advantages of web publishing, said Tedeschi, are the ability to revise easily and keep yourself up-to-date with the field."It allows me to indulge myself in topics I would normally not touch," he said.Since retiring, he works on updating the book full-time.

The 24-chapter web book has 22 library and class adopters and 300 individual subscriptions, including some from abroad -- Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Japan and Mexico."It's not clear how many students this represents because some of the classes are very small and some very large," Tedeschi said.Subscriptions are $20 for individuals and $100 for libraries or entire classes.He also allows the subscriptions to be used in multiple classes from the same institution."My guess is that the use is modest -- about 1,500 to 2,000 students per year," he said.

Tedeschi enjoyed teaching tremendously: "My research, teaching and authoring have been equally rewarding.It is satisfying to see students' minds move, challenge, probe."While at SUNY, he developed a new sophomore course in cell biology.It included essay exams and tests every week."The improvement from one set of tests to another was enormous," he said.

Several of his students went on to become successful in their field.Four became professors, one at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, another at Drake University and another is at the New York University School of Dentistry.

WINONA, Minnesota, March 14, 2000 -- The next issue of the Academic Author, being mailed to TAA members at the first of the month, profiles biochemist Henry Tedeschi, who has put a continually updated textbook on the web.

...

Tedeschi's Cell Physiology: Molecular Dynamics went through ink-on-paper editions before he decided on the web.

WINONA, Minnesota, March 14, 2000 -- The next issue of the Academic Author, being mailed to TAA members at the first of the month, profiles biochemist Henry Tedeschi, who has put a continually updated textbook on the web.

...

Tedeschi's Cell Physiology: Molecular Dynamics went through ink-on-paper editions before he decided on the web.

WINONA, Minnesota, March 14, 2000 -- The next issue of the Academic Author, being mailed to TAA members at the first of the month, profiles biochemist Henry Tedeschi, who has put a continually updated textbook on the web.

...

Tedeschi's Cell Physiology: Molecular Dynamics went through ink-on-paper editions before he decided on the web.

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I agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. I understand that I will receive a subscription to ZoomInfo Community Edition at no charge in exchange for downloading and installing the ZoomInfo Contact Contributor utility which, among other features, involves sharing my business contacts as well as headers and signature blocks from emails that I receive.